Who

The Battle of Tingi

I don’t often write so-called “After Action Reports”. There are people who are
big fans of this, who write in the voice of their characters, making long,
multi-part sagas outlining the rise and fall of their empires. It’s just not
my thing.

Why We Don’t Live In Mauretania

A brief outline of the strategic situation before I get down to brass tacks.
I’m playing as the Julii, one of the three initially playable Roman factions
in the game, the other two being the Brutii and the Scipii. In the opening
stages of the game I aggressively moved into Gallia Comata, reduced the Gauls
to a band of disorganized tribes, and chased them halfway into Iberia.
[caption id=“attachment_2136” align=“alignright” width=“150” caption=“Our Sea,
cira 225 BC.“][/caption] Nominally allied with the
Iberians, while in Iberia I seized Corduba and Carthago Nova from the
Carthaginians. Pushing my luck, I sent a strike force across the Straits of
Gibraltar to take the settlement of Tingi, in Mauretania, originally a
Numidian outpost, but now held by Carthage. Tingi was lightly defended, so I
took it with little difficulty. While this was risky, given that I might find
myself fighting Gauls in the North and Carthage in the South, I decided it was
a strategically safe move for a few reasons: first, the Carthaginian’s main
front was fighting the Scipii in the East. Second, taking Tingi gave me
complete control over the Straits of Gibraltar and thus supremacy by sea.
Third, to reach Tingi by land required a long march through the desert. I had
no intention of pushing east towards Cirta and Carthage, at least at this
point, but holding Tingi seemed plausible. So I gave it a go.

In Rome: Total War in order to develop a settlement you need to keep a
family member in it to serve as Governor, and who also serves as your military
commander if attacked. I certainly wasn’t going to keep my best general,
Decius, in this provincial backwater. Fortunately, I had the perfect candidate
lined up: Manilius the Lewd.

I, Manilius

In Total War, family members accrue traits as they age. Decius, for example,
is known by his troops as “Decius the Morose.” He’s a latter-day Tiberius,
always depressed, a terrible speaker, who can lull troops to sleep before
combat with his stuttering, clumsy orations. I actually heard him one time –
I am not making this up – telling the troops “We are gathered here today to
do battle. Regrettable isn’t it? I didn’t want to be here myself, but my
mother told me that I better make a good show out of it. So here it goes.”

Young Manilius was a heavy drinker who, in an unwise moment, I put in charge
of the newly-conquered city of Massilia. Presumably besotted by wine and
drowning in an endless procession of golden-braided captured Gallic slaves,
Manilius began developing a reputation for obscene behavior, for wine-bibbing
and indecent behavior with Roman citizens’ wives (and, on occasion, with their
sons). This problem only intensified when a few years later, for tax reasons,
Massilia became our faction’s capital. Shipping him off to distant Tingi was
the perfect solution. Even a bad Governor was better than no Governor at all,
and being so distant from the capital, Tingi was practically doomed to being a
financial drain anyway. At least he’d only be embarassing himself in front of
some proto-Barbary Coast Barbarians, instead of in front of some Senator who
might influence our family’s fortune. It was a win-win situation.

Manilius was duly installed in Tingi, with a few cohorts of experienced troops
– mostly there in case we needed them in Corduba in a hurry. He had two units
of velites, lightly armored, who
hurled pilii (a sort of short, sharp, sling-thrown javelin). He also had two
units of hastati, younger troops in
armor who fought with pilii and sword. He had two additional Legionary
cohorts. He also had
a unit of equites, light cavalry,
and his own personal heavy cavalry guard, who were mostly responsible for
carrying him home safely after he threw up all over someone else’s toga.

For a while, everything was going swimmingly. The Gauls were conquered. We
began a war against the Iberians, who had committed the terrible insult of
serving us inferior Lusitanian hard cider instead of the superior Asturian
cider. And that was when Hannibal and Hamilcar Barca began their seige of
Tingi with two separate armies. My other armies were too far away to help; it
was Manilius against the hordes of Carthage.

Madidus Fortuna Adiuvat

The Carthaginians outnumbered us around two to one. Manilius was not exactly
Gaius Marius – he’s an average, or perhaps slightly worse than average,
commander. Things were not looking up. I deployed my troops near the city’s
front gate and hoped for the best.

As the battle began, I realized things were even worse than I had thought. The
enemy had deployed fairly smartly, putting a battering ram at both the front
and rear gates of the city. Surrounding each ram were several units of
infantry, sling-throwers, and, unfortunately, spearmen, who would make short
work of my cavalry. Even worse, in the distance was a troop of elephants.

Taking a deep breath, I marched all of my troops out of the front gate,
cavalry leading the charge, straight at the infantry who was carrying the ram.
Miraculously, we broke them (and their ram) in fairly short order. Pulling the
cavalry back into the city, away from the dreaded spearmen, I sent them
galloping across the city towards the rear gate, while my hastati cleaned up
the now-routed ram-carryers, and then had them harry the spearmen. The rest of
my troops I reformed inside the city gates, and marched towards the town
square. The Carthaginian troops, realizing that this gate was lost, pulled
back and began the long walk around the city to the rear gate.

Swinging the camera back to my cavalry I saw that holding the rear gate was
impossible: the Carthaginian battering ram had shattered it open, and their
troops began their invasion. I had saved us from a hammer-and-anvil attack,
but at the cost of losing the gate more quickly. I pulled all my troops back
to the town square in the middle of the city.

Rome: Total War has a game mechanic that, when I’m on the attack, I sort of
hate: troops stationed inside the town square will never rout. This is even
more annoying in Medieval 2: Total War where it feels like every siege
eventually degenerates into “build a pile of corpses around the town’s central
flagpole.” This siege marks the first time that I’ve had to rely on that game
mechanic while on defense.

My two units of pilum-throwing velites surrounded the town’s central
flagpole. As each enemy unit approached, they would sally forward and pepper
them with spears to try to break up their formation a bit; velites will fall
back by default when attacked, so this is reasonably safe if you’re fighting
on one front. When the unit was in spitting distance, I would engage them with
my legionaries (if the enemy was a unit of spearmen) or try to break them with
a cavalry charge by the general (if they were anything else). My light cavalry
roamed around the town’s back alleys, looking for units trying to flank us, of
which there were a few. Fortunately for me, none of the flankers were
spearmen. Most of the flankers were isolated, and easily broken.

The Carthaginians sent unit after unit straight at us, and we held the line.
Their men would rout, run away, and then come back for more punishment. We
were doing well.

Finally, tromping down the town’s main road, came the Carthaginian elephants.
There were 5 of them. I had never fought elephants before. “How hard can they
be?” I thought. “There are only 5 of them.”

Peppering them with pila, I braced my legionaries for impact. It did not help
much: bodies literally flew into the air and the elephants seemed none the
worse for wear. Had this happened out in the field, I have no doubt that every
one of my units would have broken and run at that moment. Desperate, I threw
both units of cavalry at the elephants. This didn’t actually hurt them, but
scared them sufficiently to force a rout. As they retreated, we managed to
kill one of the lumbering beasts.

The Carthaginians tried one more rally, but midway to the square, the
elephants went mad, stampeding their own troops. Shocked and dismayed, the
Carthaginians routed for the final time. In disbelief, I took stock of the
situation. Against all odds, I had held Tingi, losing 50 men in so doing.
Carthage had lost nearly 800.

That night, Manilius had a good drink, and I didn’t begrudge him it one bit.